
Aston Martin’s Switch to Honda Was Its Own Decision, Says Toto Wolff
Toto Wolff says Aston Martin’s shift from Mercedes to a Honda works partnership for 2026 was the team’s own decision, not a Mercedes move, and flags early reliability issues that must be fixed quickly.
Aston Martin will become a Honda works team in 2026, ending its five‑year stint with Mercedes. Team principal Adrian Newey and owner Lawrence Stroll called it a strategic push for titles, and Mercedes boss Toto Wolff said the split was Aston Martin’s own decision.
Why it matters:
The power‑unit partnership defines a team’s performance ceiling. Switching to a works Honda engine gives Aston Martin full control over development, but also puts the onus on Honda to deliver reliability and pace comparable to the dominant Mercedes unit.
The details:
- Aston Martin has been a Mercedes customer since its 2021 return, using Mercedes‑spec power units through the Racing Point era.
- The team announced a conscious decision to become a works partner with Honda for 2026, aligning with Honda’s F1 return and Aramco sponsorship.
- Early 2026 testing exposed vibration and reliability problems with the new Honda unit, prompting Newey to prioritize fixing the issue before chasing performance.
- Newey says Honda must also start work on a 2027 engine, as a sizable power boost is required for the next regulation cycle.
- Wolff stressed the split was Aston Martin’s choice; Mercedes continues supplying Alpine, McLaren and Williams, while Honda’s partnership makes Aston Martin one of only two works teams alongside Audi for 2026.
What's next:
Honda’s 2026 unit will be developed aggressively this season, focusing on eliminating vibration and raising power. If reliability improves, Aston Martin could close the gap to Mercedes‑powered rivals and become a genuine title contender in the new era.
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